interview
		
		Vivian Stringer: 'Standing Tall' 
		
		By Michelle Wilson 
                	The 700 Club
                	
		
		
		 
		CBN.com 
			She was a small town girl with big dreams; not the fantasies  most little girls have, like becoming a princess or ballerina. No, Vivian Stringer thought of one thing day  and night; basketball.
				  "I used to wonder why is it when I hear a ball bounce and the sneakers on the  floor, I would just get excited,” Vivian said.
   
	    Now, she’s living her dream -- as the third winningest coach  in basketball history. And she’s the only coach to lead three different  collegiate schools to the final four. Vivian credits God and family for her success. .
		“Our parents taught us love, devotion, discipline, respect  for one another,” she said, “and basically held to the Bible tenants.”
		She played four years for Cheyney  State University  in Pennsylvania.  At age 22, she became the youngest coach of Cheyney State's  women's basketball team. During that time, she and her husband also started a  family. Their first child was a boy named David. Nine months later they had a  little girl named Nina. 
		“All we really wanted in this life was what we perceived as  the American dream. A white picket fence, a son and a daughter, and live  happily ever after,” Vivian said. Her  life seemed ideal.
		With coach Stringer on the sidelines, Cheyney’s average team  became unstoppable.  She took them to the  first ever NCAA Championship in 1982. But the celebration was silenced one night when Vivian’s daughter had a  seizure.
		While the team fought for the championship, Vivian sat in  the hospital, watching her 14-month-old daughter fight for her life. She was diagnosed with spinal meningitis.
		“She was never the same,” Vivian said.  “She would never walk or talk or move  again.  There were stages that I have  gone through. And you know, I questioned and I was angry. But at the end of the  day it’s the faith you can have, the relationship that you can have with the  Lord that will get you through life’s tough battles." 
		Two years later, Vivian and Bill welcomed their third child,  Justin. 
		After that, Coach Stringer’s career skyrocketed when she  began coaching at the University   of Iowa. She brought her golden touch with her. Iowa  went to the NCAA Championship in 1993. 
		But again, tragedy overshadowed her victory. Her husband had died just five months earlier.  
		 “He had had a massive heart  attack,” Vivian said. “We rushed to the hospital. The ambulance came. I just  remember the doctor coming out and explaining that he was so sorry.”
		“Everyone deals with tragedies,” Vivian said. “It’s how you  recover. How do you recover? Because I’m still not, I mean I know that the pain  is less, but you never forget.” 
		Coaching basketball didn’t seem important anymore. 
		“I didn’t  have the energy,”  Vivian said. “I looked back on my life and just reflected and  I thought, ‘I can’t go on. I can’t- I can’t make it.’ The only way I could have  gotten through these events is with confidence, trust, faith and love in my Lord  and Savior Jesus Christ.”
		Vivian moved her family to New Jersey  and began coaching at Rutgers   University. She led the Lady  Scarlet Knights to the NCAA Final Four in 2000, and again in 2007.
		Vivian’s victory was overshadowed by controversy. The team’s success was eclipsed by offensive  comments from radio host Don Imus.  
		“What he said with the microphone, I found to be so hurtful  and demeaning to, one, all women, specifically black females,” Vivian said.
		Imus apologized to the team. 
		Despite the constant struggles in her life, Coach Stringer  has learned to persevere.  She says God  gives her the strength to make it through hard times.
		“I’ve come to know that no matter how tough things are, if I  am standing here to tell you about it, I am blessed.  Because whether I realized it or not, I have  been carried. I was being carried,” she said.
		Coach Stringer has written about her life’s tragedies and  triumphs in her book, Standing Tall. Her  exemplary talent and solid trust in God has made her a basketball legend. 
		“Jesus is my Lord and Savior. And He's my refuge,” she said.  “He’s the person that I can always count on, the person who I quietly talk to  when no one else is there -- the person who will give me strength to handle the  most difficult of situations. And that I know is championing me to be able to  speak to others." 
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